'Nightmare nanny' disputes Upland family's story, claims mistreatment

A 64-year-old nanny who reportedly refused to move out of an Upland family's home after being fired has agreed to leave under certain conditions, ending the so-called "nanny nightmare."

A 64-year-old nanny who reportedly refused to move out of an Upland family's home after being fired has agreed to leave under certain conditions, ending the so-called "nanny nightmare."

Veronica Rocha

'Nightmare nanny' disputes family's side of the story, reportedly offers to move out

A 64-year-old woman dubbed the "nightmare nanny" who reportedly refused to move out of an Upland family’s home despite being fired three weeks earlier says the working conditions were the stuff of bad dreams, not her.

Diane Stretton told KTLA-TV Channel 5 that she worked around the clock and never received lunch or coffee breaks. She alleged that the family took advantage of her and even tried to feed her dog food.

“There wasn’t a single day I was there, except for the two days I was sick, that I didn’t do dishes and about two or three hours of cleanup. And just that alone should’ve been almost enough to equal the value of the room,” Stretton told the news station.

She claimed she wasn’t fired by Marcella and Ralph Bracamonte but quit days before they terminated her.

Stretton has not responded to requests for additional comment.

But Marcella Bracamonte told The Times that she and her husband have been trying to evict Stretton from their home after she stopped doing work and retreated to her bedroom, coming out only for meals.

There wasn't a single day I was there, except for the two days I was sick, that I didn't do dishes and about two or three hours of cleanup.— Diane Stretton, nanny

The couple found Stretton via an advertisement on Craigslist and hired her to take care of their three children, which she did initially, even teaching the couple’s youngest son how to read.

“I was pleasantly surprised with who she was,” Marcella Bracamonte said.

But Stretton’s work, they say, dwindled, and they rarely saw her.

So the couple gave Stretton a letter, asking her to leave or meet the terms of their agreement. But Marcella Bracamonte said Stretton refused to move out of their home.

I feel like a prisoner in my own home.— Marcella Bracamonte, mother

The couple even reached out to police, who declined to step in because Stretton had already been living there since March.

The Bracamontes went to court, but they say a judge sided with Stretton, contending they had not served her with the proper paperwork and so she had the right to reside at their home.

The couple feared Stretton would file a lawsuit against them, as she has done more than a dozen times in San Diego County, according to court records.